Costs A$348/year more in United States
Thinking about relocating from Australia to United States on a A$30,000 salary? This page compares the two side by side: income tax and social contributions, typical rent and groceries, and the monthly surplus you could realistically save. United States's progressive (10–37%) tax structure can shift the maths significantly versus Australia's progressive (0–45%) system — and cost of living tilts the picture further. Try our free salary calculator for any income.
A$30,000 AUD in Australia leaves you with approximately A$25,200 after income tax and Medicare Levy and other deductions — an effective tax rate of 16.0%. The same gross salary in United States results in A$26,400 (equivalent) take-home pay, reflecting a federal effective tax rate of approximately 12.0% at this salary band. After accounting for the cost of living in both countries, your estimated monthly surplus in Australia is A$922, compared to A$893 in United States — a difference of A$29 more per month in Australia. This comparison is based on standard 2025 tax rates and average cost of living data for Australia and United States.
On a A$30,000 salary, United States delivers higher take-home pay than Australia. Australia's progressive (0–45%) tax structure produces around A$4,800 in annual tax and contributions (net: A$25,200), while United States's progressive (10–37%) system results in approximately A$2,370 (net: A$17,377). The gap reflects different income tax bands, social security rates, and the way each country treats middle-income earners.
Living costs in United States (cost-of-living index: 1.08) eat into the take-home picture. After rent, groceries, transport and utilities, you'd save approximately A$29 less per month than in Australia (index: 1.02). Higher rent and day-to-day expenses can offset any tax benefit, especially in major metro areas. That's around A$348 less in annual disposable income.
On the numbers alone, Australia looks stronger for disposable income at a A$30,000 salary. But salary is only one input — housing market dynamics, family costs, schooling, healthcare access, career progression, visa and residency rules, and lifestyle preferences all matter. Use this comparison as a financial baseline, then layer in the qualitative factors that affect your specific situation.
Beyond the spreadsheet, moving from Australia to United States reshapes daily life. United States's housing market, climate, working culture and pace differ meaningfully from Australia's, and a A$30,000 salary will buy a different lifestyle in each.
A A$30,000 equivalent salary in United States would give you estimated monthly savings of $588. Whether this is "good" depends on your lifestyle, location within the country, and personal expenses.
On a A$30,000 salary in Australia, estimated annual tax is A$4,800, leaving you with approximately A$25,200 after tax.
United States has a cost of living index of 1.08 compared to Australia's 1.02 (UK = 1.00 baseline). This suggests Australia may be more affordable overall.
At this salary level, our estimates suggest you might save approximately A$29 less per month in United States.
Yes, we estimate monthly living costs based on each country's cost of living index. This is a broad estimate and actual costs vary by city and lifestyle.
Data last updated: 2025-04-01